NBA Summer League 2014: Tyler Ennis, Arinze Onuaku and James Southerland see action

Syracuse, N.Y. — Tyler Ennis saved his best moments Sunday night for when they mattered most.

The former Syracuse University point guard assisted on two 3-point shots, grabbed a defensive rebound, then drove the lane, finished with his right hand and sank an attached free throw to spur a Phoenix Suns' 93-82 comeback over the Milwaukee Bucks in the NBA Summer League.

"He's just a crafty player. He plays bigger than he is," said NBA TV analyst Derek Harper.

Ennis struggled in the first half: He went 1-for-5 from the floor and 0-for-2 from the 3-point line. One of those missed threes was an airball. Ennis finished with seven points, four assists and no turnovers in 25-plus minutes.

Seth Curry, one of Phoenix's plethora of point guards, scored 26 points. He was 5-of-7 from the 3-point line.

Ennis worked mostly against Milwaukee's 6-foot-4 Nate Wolters, the former North Dakota State scoring star who is entering his second season with the Bucks. Wolters led the Bucks in scoring with 16 points.

Rookies often have difficulty transitioning from college to the NBA Summer League, where there is little structure and a lot of attacking the rim. Duke's Jabari Parker committed six turnovers and was 4-for-15 from the field. Parker finished with 11 points and 11 rebounds. The Suns' top June draft pick, T.J. Warren, was limited to seven minutes after catching an elbow that required stitches.

NBA TV analysts over the last two games have continued to remark about Ennis' age — he is still 19 years old.

"He's gonna have to get stronger at this level," said Harper, "but he's solid."

Earlier Sunday, Arinze Onuaku played 11 minutes and 9 seconds, scored six points and grabbed four rebounds (with two steals and three turnovers) in New Orleans' 90-73 win over the Los Angeles Lakers.

James Southerland, who is also playing for the Pelicans, sank the only shot he attempted in a little more than five minutes. He took and made a 3-point shot.